Introduction: In mammals, new neurons continue to be produced throughout the adulthood in two brain regions: 1) the hippocampus and 2) the forebrain subventricular zone. Adult neurogenesis is not a stable process, and changes in response to diverse factors such as age and pathology. Furthermore, because changes in neurogenesis may in fact underlie pathogenesis, regulating or restoring neurogenesis is seen as an important therapeutic objective. In healthy and diseased mice, hippocampal neurogenesis can be robustly regulated by environmental enrichment. However, while physical activity and environmental enrichment are potentially important in the treatment of some pathologies, comparatively little is known about the molecular and physiological mechanisms underlying activity/environment-dependent changes in neurogenesis.
Objectives and hypotheses: The primary objectives of this study are to characterize the neurogenesis-mediating effects of external stimuli and, in doing so, to elucidate the mechanisms that underlie observed changes. Using voluntary wheel running as a model, this study addresses two hypotheses: 1) that extended periods of physical activity can influence adult neurogenesis in the forebrain and the hippocampus and 2) that voluntary wheel running mediates neurogenesis through both running-dependent and running-independent stimuli.
Methods: To address the first hypothesis, we used a prolonged six-week voluntary paradigm and immunohistochemical analyses to characterize neural precursor activity in the subventricular zone and hippocampus. To address the second hypothesis, we used a modified version of the above paradigm, where an additional group of mice were housed in cages with a locked running wheel.
Results: With respect to the first hypothesis, prolonged voluntary wheel running was found to increase neural precursor proliferation and neurogenesis in the hippocampal dentate gyrus relative to control animals, confirming the results of previous studies. More importantly, in this paradigm, proliferation in the forebrain subventricular zone was also found to be increased. In keeping with the second hypothesis, mice that were housed in locked-running wheel cages showed an increase in hippocampal neural precursor proliferation comparable to that of running animals. However, only running animals displayed increased hippocampal neurogenesis.
Conclusions: These results allow us to draw two novel conclusions regarding the effects of running on neurogenesis. First, proliferation in the forebrain subventricular zone, in addition to proliferation and neurogenesis in the hippocampus, is subject to regulation by wheel-running. Second, the wheel-running environment contains diverse stimuli which can influence some aspects of hippocampal neurogenesis in the absence of wheel running.